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Le CRPN à la Convention Scientifique de l'Institut Carnot Cognition
4 Chercheurs du laboratoire ont répondu présents à la Convention les 27 & 28 Novembre Campus Condorcet Paris. Anne KAVOUNOUDIAS, Patrick LEMAIRE, Marie MONTANT & Christophe LOPEZ (Resp. Pôle Sud)
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Bienvenue aux nouveaux étudiants !
L'équipe de Direction a accueilli les nouveaux entrants lors d'une matinée de présentation.
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Workshop on Multimodality in Social Interactions
December 2nd & 3rd - Campus de Marseille St Charles Posters session also - Register Now !
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Soutenance de Thèse Angélique LAMONTAGNE Lundi 9 décembre - 14h30
"Bases cognitives de la synchronisation comportementale chez le chien : effet des modulateurs sociaux"
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Nouvelle Publi Scientific Reports Éole LAPEYRE
"Pulsed lighting for adults with Dyslexia: very limited impact, confined to individuals with severe reading deficits"
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Christian CHABBERT (Eq. Vestimed) rejoint le réseau ...
des Ambassadeurs de l'Innovation du CNRS !
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Séminaire 25 Novembre Arnaud ZALTA, 11h Salle des Voûtes
"How motor dynamics shape predictions in humans"
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Rochelle Ackerley : contribution article d'opinion dans Nature
"The quest to build bionic limbs that feel like the real thing"
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Soutenance Célia Laurent- 22 novembre à 14h Amphi Charve
"Bases neurales des représentations spatiales d’environnements complexes : études électrophysiologiques du cortex rétrosplénial, de l’hippocampe et du cortex entorhinal médian"
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Neurostories 2025, 6e édition inscrivez-vous !
Rendez-vous Jeudi 30 Janvier 19h 63 La Canebière - Marseille 3 Membres du CRPN participent : Rochelle ACKERLEY, Sophia FARESSE & Stéphanie KHALFA "Entre raison & sentiment mon cerveau balance"
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Lucie CHARLES

Les séminaires du lundi accueillent le 11 Mars 11h, Salle des Voûtes, Lucie CHARLES - Centre for Brain and Behaviour, Queen Mary University of London - (invitée par Karen DAVRANCHE équipe SyDyD) 

Titre : Introspecting influence in choice: accuracy of metacognitive reports in detecting choice bi

 Résumé: Can we successfully ignore information we deem irrelevant or unreliable? And can we become aware of how such information can bias our choices? The ability to introspect and evaluate the factors influencing our decisions constitutes a key metacognitive function. However, little is known of the cognitive processes that underlie our subjective sense of being able to detect and resist unwanted influence. In this talk, I will present new studies investigating participants’ ability to make decisions free of influence. In a series of novel behavioural and neuroimaging experiments, we measured participants’ ability to voluntarily ignore information that could bias their choices. We found that irrelevant information and misinformation continued to bias decisions, even when explicitly labelled as such. This biasing effect could be manipulated experimentally and led participants to adopt suboptimal decision strategies. More importantly, participants largely remained unaware of these biases and did not manage to compensate for them, for instance by seeking additional information.

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